Vancouver police have recovered the stolen helmet of late IndyCar driver Greg Moore, which went lacking from the BC Sports activities Corridor of Fame on September 3. The helmet was worn by Moore throughout his 1998 race win on the Rio 400 in Brazil.
His household had loaned the priceless possession to the museum, which had an exhibit documenting his brief however spectacular profession. On Thursday, September 18, in a information launch on social media platform X, the Vancouver Police Division shared that the 39-year-old suspect was arrested after investigators reviewed safety footage from the BC Sports activities Corridor of Fame.
They tracked the suspect, who was arrested for theft over $5000 and possession of stolen property, to a residential constructing on Dunlevy Avenue within the Downtown Eastside.
“Greg Moore was a B.C. icon who rose to the highest of his sport and impressed us all,” Sergeant Steve Addison of the VPD stated in an announcement. “The theft of his racing helmet has impacted Greg’s household, the sports activities neighborhood, and everybody who cheered him to success. We’re relieved to have made this arrest and returned the exhibit to the B.C. Sports activities Corridor of Fame.”
Greg Moore’s father was heartbroken when his son’s priceless IndyCar helmet was stolen on September 3.
“That helmet is part of Greg that we’ll by no means get again,” Greg’s father, Ric Moore, stated in a BC Sports activities Corridor of Fame press launch. “It’s not simply racing gear, it’s a logo of who he was, the enjoyment he dropped at folks, and the desires he chased. Please, if anybody is aware of the place it’s, assist deliver it residence. Not only for us, however for everybody who cherished Greg and what he stood for.”
As per the VPD, the suspect hasn’t been formally charged and is about to look in courtroom on Friday, September 19.
How IndyCar star James Hinchcliffe reacted after his idol Greg Moore’s helmet was stolen
Greg Moore was an inspiration to many within the IndyCar world. He was touted to be American open-wheel racing’s subsequent star and had signed a three-year, $10 million contract with Group Penske from 2000 onwards. Nevertheless, he died after a tragic accident on the 1999 CART season finale in Fontana, California, when he was 24.
On lap 10 of the 500-mile race, Moore misplaced management of his No. 99 Participant’s Forysthe Mercedes-Benz, which flipped and crashed into the concrete fence at over 220 mph. The affect was such that his automobile rebounded off the obstacles earlier than flipping a number of instances and splitting into a number of items. He was pronounced lifeless at 1:21 pm on the Loma Linda Medical Centre.
James Hinchcliffe, who years down the road would observe in Canadian compatriot Greg Moore’s footsteps to turn out to be an IndyCar driver, was shocked on the latest theft of his late idol’s helmet.
“At a whole loss for what sort of individual would do that. I hope they’re discovered and the helmet returned to its rightful place,” Hinchcliffe wrote in an X put up on September 5.
Greg Moore was additionally recognized for his trademark purple racing gloves, which he wore in each race. Even at present, on October 31 yearly, the IndyCar world remembers the five-time race winner, with the phrase “Pink gloves rule” talked about in each tribute put up.
Edited by Yash Kotak

